Abstract

Abstract Excavations in caves and shell middens in Timor, south and north Sulawesi have revealed a number of regionally diverse flake stone tool traditions dating from the end of the Pleistocene to mid‐Recent times. Food remains suggest that the region was occupied by isolated communities of hunters and gatherers until agricultural settlement in the third millennium B.C. However, some early evidence of rice has been found in South Sulawesi.

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